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Description
Dwelling, Identity, and the Maya offers a new perspective on the ancient Maya that emphasizes the importance of dwelling as a social practice. Contrary to contemporary notions of the self as individual and independent, the identities of the ancient Maya grew from their everyday relations and interactions with other people, the houses and temples they built, and the objects they created, exchanged, cherished, and left behind. Using excavations of ancient Chunchucmil as a case study, it investigates how Maya personhood was structured and transformed in and beyond the domestic sphere and examines the role of the past in the production of contemporary Maya identity.
Table of Contents
Chapter 2. Conceptual Frameworks for Relational Subjects
Chapter 3. Background on Chunchucmil
Chapter 4. Personal Interactions: Gender, Age, Status, and Food
Chapter 5. Materiality: Knowledge, Biography and the Social Life of Things
Chapter 6. Moving Encounters: Circulation, Monumentality and Embodiment
Chapter 7. Being and Mayaness: The Past in the Production of Contemporary Identity
Chapter 8. Conclusion
Product details
Published | Nov 16 2009 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 246 |
ISBN | 9780759119222 |
Imprint | AltaMira Press |
Series | Archaeology in Society |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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To achieve a deeper understanding of the processes of identity-formation among the Maya of Chunchucmil, Scott Hutson articulates a relational approach to subjectivity through a focus on dwelling and daily life. He adeptly synthesizes recent theory in the social sciences and humanities dealing with subjectivity, agency, materiality, power, and practice to explore the ways in which subjectivity was produced and transformed at Chunchucmil-in the shared work of food preparation, in the intertwined biographies of people and houses, and in varied encounters with pyramids, patios, and causeways. This book exemplifies the promise of social archaeology to understand human lives in the past as well as to contribute to social theory in the present.
Arthur A. Joyce, University of Colorado at Boulder
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Dwelling, Identity, and the Maya is based upon Hutson's dissertation, but it is so much more than a dissertation monograph. It is an important addition to the scholarly literature on Maya archaeology. As well, it contains a substantial theoretical introduction which poises the study to be of interest to a wide range of archaeologist and other social theorist.
Journal of Anthropological Research